Orlando Sentinel

Philippine officers killed mayor, his family

National police say they were serving warrant for drugs

- By Jonathan Kaiman

OZAMIZ, PHILIPPINE­S — Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog’s supporters have cleaned up most of the blood, but its smell still lingers, a pungent, metallic odor. His walls and ceiling are riddled with shrapnel. A framed photo of his children hangs on the stairway, shattered and askew.

It happened just after 2 a.m. July 30 as a rare power blackout cloaked the city in darkness.

Police raided Parojinog’s house in central Ozamiz, a city of 140,000 people on the Philippine island Mindanao. For at least 30 minutes, the neighborho­od — a warren of low-slung homes beneath a tangle of telephone wires — convulsed with gunshots and explosions.

By sunrise, as the chaos subsided, 15 people were dead, including Parojinog, 60; his wife, Susan, 52; his brother; his sister; and several bodyguards.

Police say they were serving a search warrant for drugs and weapons. Parojinog’s bodyguards attacked, and they returned fire.

The Parojinogs say officers perpetrate­d a massacre.

“Everybody’s in shock,” said a relative who, like many Parojinog supporters interviewe­d for this story, refused to give her name, citing fears that police would kill them. “All the people here in Ozamiz, they feel sad for him. All of them.”

The incident represents a new stage of President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs, a brutal, often extralegal campaign that has left thousands dead.

So far, most victims have been impoverish­ed addicts and low-level runners.

In March, Philippine National Police Chief Ronald dela Rosa announced a new phase of the campaign. Police would now target the trade’s enablers — “big-time drug personalit­ies and groups.” Parojinog was on the list. “The Ozamiz incident is a grim warning that those who persist in the illegal drug trade will only reap what they have sowed,” dela Rosa told reporters.

On Wednesday, Duterte in Manila stood by the police who conducted the raid. “I will answer for it,” he said. “I will say I ordered it.”

Duterte, after a meeting Monday with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson at a regional conference in Manila, angrily brushed off reporters’ questions about his human rights record.

“Human rights Duterte said, using an

“Policemen and soldiers have died on me. The war now in Marawi, what caused it but drugs?” he said, referencin­g …,” expletive. an armed conflict in the country’s south that has killed nearly 700 people. “So human rights, don’t go there.”

Parojinog is not the first mayor to fall victim to the campaign.

In August 2016, Duterte publicly linked more than 150 officials and policemen to illegal drugs. In October, police shot and killed Samsudin Dimaukom, a smalltown mayor in the south, at a checkpoint. In November, another small-town mayor, Rolando Espinosa of Albuera, Leyte province, was shot dead in a jail cell. Both were on Duterte’s list.

But the killings July 30 have gripped the nation, riling senators and attracting wall-to-wall coverage in the local news media.

At least a half-dozen senators have publicly questioned the incident. Why did police serve a search warrant at 2 a.m.? If the mayor’s security detail fought back, why were no police seriously injured? Did 15 people really need to die?

Sen. Panfilo Lacson warned that the deaths “create the impression that search warrants are merely being used by the (Philippine National Police) to facilitate extrajudic­ial killing.”

Jovie Espenido, Ozamiz’s police chief, oversaw the police department in Albuera when that city’s mayor was killed in November. He was transferre­d to Ozamiz the following month.

“There were reports that Mayor Parojinog was involved in not only drugs, but also had been prosecuted by the government for involvemen­t in robbery,” he said. “It’s public knowledge in the city that they’re armed.”

Espenido said police arrived at Parojinog’s house after 2 a.m. and quickly encountere­d gunfire. Two rounds hit a police vehicle, and one grazed an officer’s head. Officers then heard an explosion in the house; when they entered, they found one of Parojinog’s security guards holding the pin of a grenade, his legs blown off at the knees.

Espenido shared photograph­s of contraband his force had evidently confiscate­d during the raid: so many handguns, shotguns and assault rifles, they couldn’t fit on one table.

Police also arrested Parojinog’s daughter, Vice Mayor Nova Princess Parojinog, and his son, Reynaldo “Dodo” Parojinog Jr.

“We have apprehende­d here 140 or 150 people (in Ozamiz) for involvemen­t in illegal drugs,” Espenido said. “And we’ve tracked them to the vice mayor.”

On Wednesday afternoon, Parojinog’s friends, family and supporters gathered at his wake at a basketball court near his home. Five open caskets, each containing a heavily made-up Parojinog family member, were ringed with dozens of floral wreaths donated by city employees and local businesses — Mhars MC Medical, the 1st Valley Bank.

There, two relatives described a different scene. They were far from the house when the raid occurred, held back by a police cordon. But they said a witness — Parojinog’s brother’s driver — survived, and they recounted his story.

Police roused the Parojinogs, then corralled them in the living room and made them lie on their stomachs, according to the driver. They walked out and threw a grenade into the room. The blast killed Parojinog’s sister Mona, 52, and one other person immediatel­y. Then police returned and shot three survivors: Parojinog, his wife and his brother.

The driver smeared the mayor’s blood on his face and body so police would think he was dead, then crawled from the house once they’d left. The relatives would not give the driver’s name and said he was in hiding.

“Now the family seeks justice, especially for the (mayor’s) sister and the brother. They were innocent and not on the list,” said the other family member. “Why did law enforcemen­t kill them all and not investigat­e them? We’re asking why. It’s a big question mark.”

On Tuesday, Parojinog’s nephew died in a hospital, bringing the death toll to 16.

Parojinog’s employees accused the police of a coverup. “He had a lot of cameras — six of them,” one said. “Because he knew that something bad would happen to him.” Police confiscate­d all of them in the raid. When asked why Parojinog was afraid, the employee said, “because he was a politician.”

 ?? ROLEX DELA PENA/EPA ?? National police Chief Ronald dela Rosa defended the July 30 raid that killed Ozamiz Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog.
ROLEX DELA PENA/EPA National police Chief Ronald dela Rosa defended the July 30 raid that killed Ozamiz Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog.

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